A former opinion editor at the right-wing Washington Times, Emily Miller, conducted an investigative report for a Fox affiliate where she spread unchallenged falsehoods about transgender people in a 'report' on Maryland's new nondiscrimination law.

"Maryland moms and dads will now have to be more vigilant when their children use public bathrooms," Miller wrote last month in The Washington Times. "It will soon be legal for a man who simply says he identifies as a woman to use the ladies' room."

Miller went on to write, "This serious risk for sexual assaults of women and little girls is all in the name of political correctness," and made repeated use of unnecessary "scare quotes" around the term "transgender."

Those assertions are provably false but remain a common scare tactic used by those who oppose equal access for transgender people. The claims put forward in Miller's op-ed closely resemble the debunked talking points often used by conservative organizations and antitransgender activists, prompting progressive media watchdog organization Media Matters to call out Miller's lies.

Despite the fact that Miller's report for WTTG was presented as a straight news story — not an opinon piece — Miller recycled the same claims employed in her op-ed in her supposedly unbiased local news report.

"Governor O'Malley signed the law despite controversy over the fact that 'public accommodations' means that men who identify as women will be allowed to use women's bathrooms," Miller began her TV report. "On a national level, people agree with not discriminating but disagree with the bathroom issue," Miller continued, citing a problematically worded poll from conservative data collector Rasmussen.

Her investigative report included a "man on the street" segment, in which Miller continued to misrepresent the facts behind the law. After one of Miller's interview subjects expressed support for the bill — sharing the sentiment of 71 percent of Marylanders, according to the latest polling data — Miller interjected, "Men can go into women's bathrooms. How do you feel about that?"

The segment concluded with Republican delgate Neil Parrott — the man behind efforts to repeal the measure — making the false claim that Maryland is only the second state to have such a law, when in reality it is the 18th.